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The Marketleap Report
Vol. 1 - Issue #19 - November
14, 2001
Search Engines
The Marketers Cost Efficient Outlet for Results and
Relevance
by Keith Boswell
The Internet is only as good
as what it connects to. Good networks rely on authentication.
Authentication provides reliability, accuracy and
trust. Companies that focus on search engine strategy,
at the same time they work on their web business strategy,
find success because they know how to communicate
with the network.
As the usage of the Internet spreads, people turn
to search engines to guide their travels. Studies
consistently show that 80-85% of web users find web
sites they are looking for through search engines.
Search engines help make sense out of the vast expanse
of web pages available for browsing.
Sites that hope to attract successful, qualified visitors
must be aware of their visibility within search engine
results. If they are not aware of that visibility,
they will never realize their true potential online
audience. Too many companies abandon or claim failure
with their online initiatives because of a lack of
understanding on the basics of being visible online.
Why do users of the Internet turn to search engines?
Where else can you hope to assimilate all of the information
available online? Search engines work because people
believe they will find what they are looking for more
easily than guessing or attempting to find a site
on their own. In order for the technology to work,
search engines rely on sophisticated algorithms that
analyze data on a web site and link popularity to
determine the results they present to users.
Link popularity increases the likelihood
that a search engine user connects with the right
web site by factoring in the number of qualified sites
that provide links to the site in question. The algorithms
that search engines use examine the HTML code and
content of a web site to help factor relevancy. Once
these two elements come together, more accurate search
results are given.
Companies hoping for success must understand the elements
that a search engine looks for when it reviews a web
site. A niche industry called Search Engine Optimization
(SEO) continues to grow because more companies realize
they don't have the in-house expertise to successfully
have their site be found or indexed by major search
engines.
When search engine optimization became a hot topic,
talk centered around META-tags and Keywords. Some
people were lead to believe that by putting all the
keywords they wanted to be associated with by search
engines into their META-tags, everyone searching online
would find them.
Terms like business, sales, marketing and other empty
terms were crammed into HTML code like scattered garbage.
Misguided clients searched through sites like Yahoo
and Excite and when they could not locate their site
with the keywords they had in their META-tags, called
their search engine marketers crying for explanations.
Today, reputable SEO companies depend on a number
of tactics to help their clients find success with
their search engine visibility. Link building and
analysis, keyword analysis, submission and verification,
site analysis and in depth monitoring ensure a solid
search engine strategy.
Links are a vital piece in establishing relevancy.
Qualified links from sites that are similar in nature
to your own help to improve credibility with search
engines. If your site suffers from poor linking from
exterior sites, a campaign to get links from those
sites is in order. Requesting links from sites that
will appeal to your online audience help build community
and promote your place in it.
Link analysis involves assessing the number of links
that are currently pointing at a website online. Tools
like the Google Search Bar, used on a PC running Internet
Explorer 5 and above, allows you to quickly run a
reverse link check on any website. By knowing how
many links and the types of sites that are linking
to a site, a company understands its relevancy to
the entire online audience. The more links, the better
a company appears to the online community.
Keywords are the words that visitors to a search engine
will use to find a website. Terms like business and
sales are in use by thousands of companies and to
be found in that sea is a slim hope without paid placement.
Instead of using generic terms, companies will find
that niche terms that tie directly into their business
and products greatly increases the chances of appearing
high within search engine results.
Keywords then become part of a content strategy. It
helps to include these terms within META data on a
site but integrating the keywords into valuable content
also increases the chances of being found. Content,
not simply lists of words, makes something relevant.
Back in the late 90's, one of the most popular types
of spam email to receive was the pitch to submit a
website to thousands of search engines for $19.95.
Hundreds and thousands of customers lined up and used
this type of service in the hope of attracting the
flood of traffic they knew really awaited them online.
Most of them found disappointment and disillusionment
when the flood never came.
The empty promise could never work because submission
to search engines and then verifying those submissions
is a crucial step in a search engine strategy. Each
of the search engines has a particular version of
the submission process. Most of the information that
each of them collects is similar, but there are nuances
and differences that if not addressed will keep a
submission from reaching its maximum potential.
Smart submission strategies involve hand submitting
the site to each search engine individually. While
taking more time, it ensures that each is accurate
and complete for every individual engine. Companies
that promise submission to hundreds or thousands rapidly
are using software to fill in the submission forms
and do not account for minor differences amongst the
different engines.
Web site analysis helps companies that have already
built their online presence understand the elements
within their site that they can improve to achieve
greater results within search results. Guidelines
are built that provide short and long-term strategies
for improving a sites search engine visibility. META
enhancements, improved content and features, and increased
submission of multiple pages within a site help ensure
consistent search success.
Ongoing monitoring and resubmission are the final
components necessary to stay on top. By analyzing
a sites ongoing position within search results, companies
can continue to make subtle changes to their site
to maintain and improve their ranking. As new content
comes online, it is important to submit that content
to the search engines as well. The more available
unique pages you present to search engines, the more
likely you are to be found.
Relevant connections. That is the goal. It's also
why companies must assess how they communicate with
search engines if they hope to reach their audience.
To blindly go online today and hope to be found is
like walking into the night eyes closed, hoping to
run into the party of your life. Your audience uses
search engines all the time. Whether they find you
or not depends on how much intelligent planning you
put into helping them.
report@marketleap.com. |